On her first day of school, Scout gets into a fight with Walter after she explained Walter's predicament to the teacher and the teacher punishes Scout so Scout was mad at Walter and attacked him.
Scout gets in trouble for knowing how to read because the teachers are advised to teach in a new way. Also, she gets in trouble when Walter Cunningham doesn't bring his lunch and the teacher gives him a quarter for lunch to be paid back tomorrow. Scout, with knowledge of the Cunningham family, tells the teacher he is poor and can't pay the money back. The teacher gets furious and calls her to the front of the room to be whipped by a ruler.
1. She can already read.
2. She knows how to handwrite.
3. She was punished for trying to explain why Walter would not take the money.
Scout gets in trouble at her aunt's house when she fights with her cousin Francis after he insults her father, Atticus, by calling him a "n*gger-lover." This causes a heated argument and leads to Scout getting reprimanded by her uncle Jack.
While visiting her Aunt Alexandra, Scout's cousin Francis makes a statement about Atticus (Scout's father) and Scout punches him in the mouth. (This is a book everyone should read).
She gets in trouble because she already knows how to read and write...what a mean teacher :P
She explains that Walter Cunningham wouldn't be able to pay her back if she loaned him some money for lunch, and that therefore, he wouldn't accept the money.
Scout punched her cousin right in the mouth
Scout makes a comment about how Walter Cunningham covered his food with a ton of syrup.
She got in trouble at the dinner table for asking the boy why he was eating like that.
She beats up Walter.
Her cousin said she was trying to beat him up and said she was using profanity.
Scout punched her cousin right in the mouth
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," according to Scout, Boo Radley lives in the Radley house.
In "To Kill a Mockingbird," Scout mistakes a rubber ball wrapped in a stocking for a snake. She is scared and immediately goes to her brother Jem for help. This incident contributes to the general theme of appearance versus reality in the novel.
It was Mr. Cunningham's son. It was lunch and not dinner. It is To Kill A Mockingbird. There is no How in the title.
The first dare made concerning the house in "To Kill a Mockingbird" was when Dill dared Scout to touch the Radley house. This dare eventually led to Scout rolling into the Radley yard and encountering Boo Radley for the first time.
If your mom likes your aunt she probably won't get in trouble. Of course, you'll have to back home when your mom finds you.
he put a blanket on Scout when Mrs. Maudie's house was on fire, this is because scout looked cold and scared.
someone laughing!
Jem tells Scout that when he returned to get his pants from Boo Radley's house, his pants were sewn up and placed neatly on top of the fence.
Boo Radley, a reclusive neighbor, was inside the house when Scout was rolled into their yard. Boo had been secretly watching over the children and ultimately played a significant role in protecting them.
At the Finch house, trouble begins when Scout and Jem are harassed by Bob Ewell following the trial, putting them in harm's way. At the jail, trouble starts when a mob arrives to lynch Tom Robinson, but is diffused by Scout's innocent conversation with Mr. Cunningham.